| Literature DB >> 34163508 |
Soo In Sohn1, Subramani Pandian1, Young Ju Oh2, Hyeon Jung Kang1, Woo Suk Cho1, Youn Sung Cho1.
Abstract
Isoflavones are ecophysiologically active secondary metabolites derived from the phenylpropanoid pathway. They were mostly found in leguminous plants, especially in the pea family. Isoflavones play a key role in plant-environment interactions and act as phytoalexins also having an array of health benefits to the humans. According to epidemiological studies, a high intake of isoflavones-rich diets linked to a lower risk of hormone-related cancers, osteoporosis, menopausal symptoms, and cardiovascular diseases. These characteristics lead to the significant advancement in the studies on genetic and metabolic engineering of isoflavones in plants. As a result, a number of structural and regulatory genes involved in isoflavone biosynthesis in plants have been identified and characterized. Subsequently, they were engineered in various crop plants for the increased production of isoflavones. Furthermore, with the advent of high-throughput technologies, the regulation of isoflavone biosynthesis gains attention to increase or decrease the level of isoflavones in the crop plants. In the review, we begin with the role of isoflavones in plants, environment, and its benefits in human health. Besides, the main theme is to discuss the updated research progress in metabolic engineering of isoflavones in other plants species and regulation of production of isoflavones in soybeans.Entities:
Keywords: MYB transcription factors; genistein; isoflavones; metabolic engineering; phenylpropanoid pathway; soybean
Year: 2021 PMID: 34163508 PMCID: PMC8216759 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.670103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1Structure of important isoflavones.
FIGURE 2Natural role of isoflavones in plants and environmental interactions.
FIGURE 3Benefits of isoflavones in human health.
FIGURE 4Partial phenylpropanoid pathway for the isoflavone biosynthesis.
Metabolic engineering of isoflavone biosynthetic genes in various plants.
| S. no. | Plants | Genes | Promoter | Purpose | References |
| 1 | Accumulation of genistein | ||||
| 2 | Tobacco ( | Not identified | |||
| 3 | Maize BMS cell lines | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 4 | Accumulation of genistein | ||||
| 5 | Alfalfa ( | Accumulation of genistein, glycosides of biochanin A, formononetin, and daidzein | |||
| 6 | Rice ( | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 7 | Rice ( | Dihydroquercetin, dihydroisorhametin, 3′- | |||
| 8 | Tobacco ( | Increased accumulation of genistein and genistein glycosides | |||
| 9 | Tobacco ( | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 10 | Lettuce ( | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 11 | Petunia ( | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 12 | Tomato ( | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 13 | Tobacco | Accumulation of genistein and daidzein | |||
| 14 | Rapeseed ( | Accumulation of Genistein | |||
| 15 | Rice ( | Accumulation of naringenin, kaempferol, genistein and apigenin | |||
| 16 | Rice ( | Not identified | |||
| 17 | Tobacco ( | Enhanced biosynthesis of isoflavones and flavonols | |||
| 18 | Rice ( | Accumulation of genistein | |||
| 19 | Barrel medic ( | Increased accumulation of genistein, daidzein, biochanin A, and formononetin | |||
| 20 | Onion ( | Increased accumulation of genistein |
Studies on the regulation of isoflavone biosynthesis in soybean.
| S. no. | Genes | Regulation | Results | References |
| 1 | Positive regulation | RNAi-mediated gene silencing reduced the level of isoflavone content in the soybean | ||
| 2 | Negative regulation | Transformed plants found reduced accumulation of isoflavones and increased accumulation of phenolic compounds | ||
| 3 | Positive regulation | No significant improvement in the overexpression but in transient expression | ||
| 4 | Negative regulation | RNAi-mediated silencing increased the genistein level significantly | ||
| 5 | Negative regulation | Overexpression reduced the transcript levels of | ||
| 6 | Negative regulation | RNAi-mediated silencing increased the daidzein and genistein level significantly | ||
| 7 | Negative regulation | Overexpression reduced the transcript level, whereas RNAi-mediated gene silencing increased the transcript level of isoflavonoids genes | ||
| 8 | Positive regulation | Overexpression increased the isoflavone level in 1.6- to 3.3-fold, whereas RNAi gene silencing decreased the isoflavone content in twofold | ||
| 9 | Positive regulation | Overexpression significantly increased the level of isoflavone aglycones, glucosides. and malonylates, whereas knockdown the genes reduced the contents | ||
| 10 | Positive regulation | Activates CHS8 and CHI1A and increases the accumulation of isoflavones | ||
| 11 | Positive regulation | Corresponding genes for the | ||
| 12 | Positive regulation | Overexpression of | ||
| 13 | Positive regulation | Increased the transcript level of | ||
| 14 | Positive regulation | Two- to fourfold increased accumulation of isoflavones was found | ||
| 15 | Positive regulation | Activating | ||
| 16 | Positive regulation | CRISPR/Cas9-mediated targeted gene editing leads to the increased accumulations of isoflavones | ||
| 17 | Positive regulation | Overexpression increased glyceollin accumulation and RNAi gene silencing decreased the accumulation. Accumulation of glyceollin leads to the resistance to | ||
| 18 | Positive regulation | T2 transgenic plants accumulated the higher level of genistein and daidzein than the control plants | ||
| 19 | Positive regulation | Improved the accumulation of isoflavone biosynthetic genes based on the diurnal regulation system | ||
| 20 | Positive regulation | Enhance accumulation of multiple isoflavonoid phytoalexins, namely, glyceollin, isowighteone, and |